Nikki was a textbook example of a loser and lowlife. He never worked, stole everything he put his hands on, and the list goes on. Oh yeah, for all his titles he was rewarded by the government with food stamps to eat for free all year long, so he's a foodstamper as well.
by StubDaddy December 29, 2024
Get the Foodstamper mug.Here Nikki came. He came to the grocery store once a month, spending his EBT benefits, spending his food stamps, or as he himself phrased it, he was "foodstamping". He liked to rub it in our faces that he didn't have a job and that he was eating for free. I even heard him tell a cashier to work harder so that he, Nikki, might get more EBT benefits because of their hard work.
by StubDaddy December 29, 2024
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by itch2coj January 17, 2026
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1. To deliberately simulate sleep in order to avoid confrontation
2. To enter “strategic unconsciousness.”
1. To deliberately simulate sleep in order to avoid confrontation
2. To enter “strategic unconsciousness.”
“Turn off the TV, my mom’s coming upstairs, everybody folst.”
“My roommate asked who finished the milk and I folsted on the couch mid sentence.”
“Grandma said it was time for family photos and my little cousin folsted standing up.”
“My roommate asked who finished the milk and I folsted on the couch mid sentence.”
“Grandma said it was time for family photos and my little cousin folsted standing up.”
by Gramatical Man February 24, 2026
Get the Folst mug.by DJ_49920 March 3, 2026
Get the Foolgle mug.The theory, from Taleb's book of the same name, that humans systematically misinterpret random events, seeing patterns where none exist and attributing skill to luck. Fooled by Randomness Theory argues that we are narrative creatures, wired to find stories in noise, to see causes where there are only correlations, to believe we understand what is actually random. Successful traders are often just lucky, not skilled; failed entrepreneurs are often just unlucky, not incompetent. The theory explains why we overestimate our ability to predict, why we trust experts who are actually random, why we build theories on statistical flukes. It's the foundation of skepticism about success stories, about "genius" CEOs, about anyone whose track record could be explained by chance. The theory doesn't deny skill; it insists on distinguishing skill from luck—and shows how bad we are at that distinction.
Example: "The hedge fund manager had ten years of brilliant returns. Fooled by Randomness Theory asked: could this happen by chance? The math said yes—a few funds will always be lucky by pure randomness. The manager was celebrated as a genius until the next ten years revealed the truth: he'd been lucky, not skilled. His investors had been fooled by randomness."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the Fooled by Randomness Theory mug.A framework revealing how we mistake transient circumstances for permanent structures, or local conditions for universal laws. Fooled by Circumstances Theory shows how we attribute outcomes to inherent qualities (skill, character, destiny) when they are actually products of specific situations. The successful are not necessarily better; they may just be in favorable circumstances. The failed are not necessarily worse; they may be victims of circumstance. We are fooled when we ignore the power of context, seeing only individuals and their choices.
Fooled by Circumstances Theory "He succeeded, so he must be brilliant. She failed, so she must be lazy. Fooled by Circumstances: ignoring that he had family wealth and she had none, that he had connections and she had none. We see people; we miss the circumstances that make them. Circumstances fool us, and we never even notice."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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